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A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF LOUIS DUREY AND FRANCIS POULENC’S SETTINGS OF SELECTIONS FROM LE BESTIAIRE BY GUILLAUME APOLLINIARE An Honors Thesis submitted by Allison K. Hill 5828 Criner Rd. Huntsville, Alabama 35802 (256) 417-2552 [email protected] In partial fulfillment of the degree Bachelor of Music in Music Education with Honors April 27, 2011 Project Advisor: Dr. Thomas Milligan © 2011 Allison K. Hill

A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF LOUIS DUREY AND … · Jean Cocteau cited Eric Satie as an example of a composer who embodied the “new spirit” he called for in Paris. Many young composers

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  • A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF LOUIS DUREY AND FRANCIS POULENCS SETTINGS OF SELECTIONS FROM

    LE BESTIAIRE BY GUILLAUME APOLLINIARE

    An Honors Thesis submitted by

    Allison K. Hill

    5828 Criner Rd.

    Huntsville, Alabama 35802

    (256) 417-2552

    [email protected]

    In partial fulfillment of the degree

    Bachelor of Music in Music Education with Honors

    April 27, 2011

    Project Advisor: Dr. Thomas Milligan

    2011 Allison K. Hill

  • Approval Sheet

    A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF LOUIS DUREY AND FRANCIS POULENCS SETTINGS OF SELECTIONS FROM

    LE BESTIAIRE BY GUILLAUME APOLLINIARE

    ________________________________ ________________________________ Faculty Advisor Chair, Music Department

    ________________________________ Director, Honors Program

  • Special Thanks

    To Dr. Thomas Milligan for his advice and encouragement throughout the process of preparing this paper. To Professor Ann Jones for nurturing my love for the study of voice and for her constant guidance and encouragement. To my parents for supporting me wholeheartedly in all my endeavors.

  • iv

    Table of Contents

    List of Figures v

    I. Introduction 1 a. Purpose of Study 1 b. Context of Study: Paris, 1920s 3 c. Les Six 5

    II. Analytical Techniques 7 III. Biographical Background 8

    a. Guillaume Apollinaire 8 b. Louis Durey 10 c. Francis Poulenc 12 d. Raoul Dufy 14

    IV. Le BestiaireThe Union of the Poem and the Woodcut 16 a. Le chvre du Thibet 18 b. Le dromadaire 20 c. La sauterelle 22 d. Le dauphin 24 e. Lcrevisse 26 f. La carpe 28

    V. Le BestiaireSong by Song Commentary and Analysis 29 a. Le chvre du Thibet 32 b. Le dromadaire 36 c. La sauterelle 40 d. Le dauphin 44 e. Lcrevisse 47 f. La carpe 51

    VI. Conclusion 55 Bibliography 58

  • v

    List of Figures Fig. 1 Le chvre du Thibet, mm. 1-432

    Fig. 2 Le chvre du Thibet, mm. 4-534

    Fig. 3 Le dromadaire, mm. 3-5.36

    Fig. 4 Le dromadaire, mm. 13-15.37

    Fig. 5 Le dromadaire, mm. 40-43.39

    Fig. 6 La sauterelle, mm. 1-540

    Fig. 7 La sauterelle, mm. 1-242

    Fig. 8 Le dauphin, mm. 1-2..44

    Fig. 9 Le dauphin, mm. 5-6..45

    Fig. 10 L crevisse, mm. 1-2.47

    Fig. 11 L crevisse, mm. 1-2.49

    Fig. 12 La carpe, mm. 5-6.51

    Fig. 13 La carpe, mm. 9-10...53

  • 1

    I. Introduction

    a. Purpose of Study

    Le Bestiaire ou Cortge dOrphe (The Book of Beasts or Procession of Orpheus)

    is a collection of thirty poems by Guillaume Apollinaire (1880-1918), an influential

    figure in the French Symbolist movement. The poems describe Orpheus and the parade of

    animals following him. According to Greek mythology, Mercury gave Orpheus a lyre

    made from a tortoises shell, bound with leather, strung with sheep gut, with branches

    and a bridge.1 Orpheus played his lyre and sang as savage animals gathered around and

    followed him.

    Each Bestiaire poem is accompanied by an illustration, a woodcut by Raoul Dufy

    (1877-1953), on the opposite page. Apollinaire and Dufy worked closely together to

    ensure that each poem and woodcut would interact with the other. This extent of poet-

    illustrator collaboration is unusual, because often the author exerts little control over the

    illustrations that appear with his work. In fact, Dufys woodcuts serve an important role

    in interpreting each poem. As Willard Bohn remarks, [the woodcuts] rejecting a purely

    passive rolecomplement the verbal text and interpret it in a variety of ways.2

    Louis Durey (1888-1979) and Francis Poulenc (1899-1963), both members of the

    avant-garde group of French composers Les Six, set the Apollinaire poems to music.

    Durey set twenty-six of the poems to music, while Poulenc set six of them to music.

    Originally, Poulenc set twelve of the poems, but on the advice of his friend Georges

    Auric, another member of Les Six, he kept only six. Regardless, each was unaware of the

    1Guillaume Apollinaire, Bestiary: The Parade of Orpheus, trans. Pepe Karmel (Boston: David Godine, 1980), 63. 2 Willard Bohn, "Contemplating Apollinaire's Bestiaire." Modern Language Review 99, no. 1 (2004): 45.

  • 2

    other composing to the same poem set. In fact, when Poulenc found out that Durey had

    composed Le Bestiaire, he was shocked and while on leave from the army, went to meet

    Durey. The composers both handled the situation well; Poulenc even dedicated his setting

    of Le Bestiaire to Durey. Jean Cocteau, a French literary figure, remarked on the

    differences between Durey and Poulencs Le Bestiaire settings: Where Poulenc frolics

    on puppy paws, Durey treads with the step of a doe. Both are wholly natural. That is why

    one appreciates them with the same enjoyment.3 Marc Wood asserts that Dureys songs

    are more lyrical and less humorous and quirky than Poulencs.4 It is interesting to note

    that, while both song settings were reasonably well known in their time, Dureys set has

    fallen into obscurity today, while Poulencs settings are often included in French art song

    anthologies and performed in song recitals.

    Although it only contained six of the 26 poems, the Poulenc setting of Le

    Bestiaire is generally considered the more superior setting of Apollinaires poetry. In this

    project, I will perform a comparative analysis on the two song sets limiting it to the six

    songs in common. In doing so, I will examine the composer-composer relationship, the

    poet-composer relationships and the context in which the song sets and poems were

    written. I will consider the effectiveness of the two composers characterization of the

    animals in setting the poetry to music and comment on whether or not the Poulenc setting

    is, in fact, superior to Dureys settings.

    3James Harding, The Ox on the Roof (New York: St. Martins, 1972), 62. 4 Marc Wood, Homme de tte, Musical Times 141 (Winter 2000): 44.

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    b. Context of Study: Paris, 1920s

    The composers, the poet, and the visual artist all lived in Paris, France, while

    creating Le Bestiaire. Following World War I, Paris reestablished itself as an

    international art center, after years of biting at the heels of Austria and Germanyboth of

    which were now struggling to regain economic security.5 Paris had a unique appeal to

    artists, and following the war, many artists moved to Paris in hopes of jumpstarting, or

    salvaging, their careers. In the late nineteenth century, at the end of the Franco-Prussian

    War, French artistsespecially musiciansworked to achieve a style free of Russian

    influence. This nationalism continued post World War I as French musicians worked

    toward a French style free of German influence. The French poet Jean Cocteau published

    an essay entitled Le Coq et LArlequin (The Cock and Harlequin) which advised

    against Wagnerian fog and even against Debussian mist in musical compositions. He

    urged artists to avoid German Romanticism, French Impressionism, and Russian

    paganism in an attempt to achieve every-day music that was simple in structure and

    modest in scope.6 Louis Durey and Francis Poulenc were both, at one point, among the

    group of artists that heeded Cocteaus advice (although they did not necessarily resonate

    with it personally).

    Although the poet Guillaume Apollinaire died before hearing the musical settings

    of Le Bestiaire, the artists lives were intertwined. Le Bestiaire was Apollinaires first set

    of poetry. Le Bestiaire was Poulencs first collection of mlodies. Poulenc and Durey

    were colleaguesboth were members of the avant-garde group of composers, Les Six.

    Durey, Poulenc, and Apollinaire all fought on Frances behalf during World War I. And 5 Peter S. Hansen, Twentieth Century Music (Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1971), 109. 6 Robert Morgan, Twentieth-Century Music: A History of Musical Style in Modern Europe and America (New York: WW Norton, 1991), 159.

  • 4

    on the artistic level, Durey and Poulenc were among the composers inspired by the

    Symbolist artistic movementa movement to which Apollinaire was a major contributor.

    The Symbolist movement, which began in the late-nineteenth century, was one of

    the most significant artistic movements in this time period. Symbolists, in general, sought

    to liberate the technique of versification in such a way that would evoke feelings in the

    reader rather than simply describe objects.7 The Symbolists veered from the precision of

    conventional poetry and, instead, strove to obscure images. Guillaume Apollinaire was

    greatly influenced by Symbolists such as Paul Verlaine and Victor Hugo. He resonated

    with the musicalization of poetry that the Symbolist poets sought to accomplish.

    Apollinaire, along with the Symbolists, sought to wed poetry and music.8 Apollinaire,

    in describing his writing process to a friend, said that he generally composed when

    walking and singing two or three tunes that come to [him] quite naturally and that one of

    [his] friends has jotted down.9 Translator Pepe Karmel notes, the poems of Bestiary

    mingle lyric imagery with a bawdy sense of humor, flashes of sincere religiosity, and the

    melodious rhythms of the folk song or nursery rhyme.10 Although, on the surface, the

    Bestiaire poetry concerns a seemingly jovial procession of animals, it holds deeper

    implications despite the simplicity of the four-lined quatrain. The symbolism of the

    animals in the procession will be further discussed later in this study.

    7 Elaine Brody, Paris: The Musical Kaleidoscope 1870-1925 (London: Robson Books, 1988), 158. 8 Brody, Paris, 160. 9 Brody, Paris, 161. 10 Pepe Karmel, translators note to Bestiary: The Parade of Orpheus, by Guillaume Apollinaire (Boston: David Godine, 1980), viii.

  • 5

    c. Les Six

    Jean Cocteau cited Eric Satie as an example of a composer who embodied the

    new spirit he called for in Paris. Many young composers regarded Satie as a champion

    of French music and emulated his attempts to create a simplistic, yet distinct type of

    music. Francis Poulenc and Louis Durey were among the group of avant-garde French

    composers who strived for these ideals. Along with Poulenc and Durey, Georges Auric,

    Germaine Tallieferre, Darius Milhaud, and Arthur Honneger made up a group of young

    composers named the Nouveaux Jeunes whose music was seen, to some, as a reaction

    against Impressionist music.11 In fact, Les Nouveaux Jeunes are sometimes considered a

    neo-classic group of musicians.12 Following one of their first collaborative concerts in

    April of 1919, music critic Henri Collet likened the six composers to the Russian Five

    and thus dubbed them les Six Franais.13 From that point on, the group was known as

    Les Six. With Cocteau as their spokesperson and Satie as their spiritual godfather, Les

    Six represented a fresh style of music in postwar France.14 They strove for a sound that

    could be heard outside the concert hall and, instead, in the caf-cabaret, circus, and jazz

    halls. In other words, they composed music that they believed would appeal to the

    common man. In their pursuit of creating music absent of German romantic

    characteristics, Les Six often chose everyday, simple subjects for their music.

    Les Six were united by friendship and circumstantial connections. Their musical

    tastes, however, varied greatly. According to James Harding, Honegger was greatly

    influenced by the German Romantics, while Milhaud leaned toward Mediterranean

    11 K. Marie Stolba, The Development of Western Music: A History (Boston: McGraw-Hill, 1998), 571. 12 Stolba, The Development of Western Music, 605. 13 The Russian Five, known for their Romantic Nationalist music, were Mily Balakirev, Csar Cui, Modest Mussorgsky, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov and Alexander Borodin. They were active during 156-1870. 14 Morgan, Twentieth-Century Music, 162.

  • 6

    lyricism.15 Auric and Poulenc strived for the liberation of French musica somewhat

    Nationalistic approach to French music. While Durey was consumed with the music of

    Debussy and Ravel, much to Cocteau and Saties chagrin, Tailleferrethe only female in

    the groupwas influenced by whatever was the prevailing trend.16 The group met

    weekly, on Saturdays, at Milhauds home. Occasionally gathering at cafs or salons, Les

    Six were often joined by other musicians, painters and writers.17

    Les Six were active as a group only a few years in the 1920s. They were too

    different individually to successfully collaborate because of their conflicting musical

    styles and opinions. Les Six collaborated on two works as a group (the Album des Six for

    piano, 1920, and Les maris de la tour Eiffel, 1921) and eventually disbanded, pursuing

    their careers separately, but remaining close friends.18

    15 Harding, The Ox on the Roof, 69.16 Harding, Ox on the Roof, 69. 17 Harding, Ox on the Roof, 69. 18 Mark DeVoto, Paris, 1918-1945, in Modern Times: From World War I to the present, ed. Robert Morgan (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1994), 46.

  • 7

    II. Analytical Techniques

    In this study, I will examine the biographical background of Guillaume

    Apollinaire, Francis Poulenc, Louis Durey, and Raoul Dufy and, the interactions between

    the artists. Next, I will examine Le Bestiaire as poetry, providing my own interpretations

    of the poetry and woodcuts, as well as critics interpretations. As an introduction to the

    actual comparative analyses, I will provide background information regarding Le

    Bestiaire as music. I will include information concerning when each composer

    composed his setting, why Durey chose to set the whole set of poems to music, while

    Poulenc only set six, and other pertinent areas of discussion regarding the differences and

    similarities between the two settings of Le Bestiaire.

    The main body of my project will encompass the actual analyses of the music. I

    will perform a song-by-song commentary presenting the Durey setting first, followed by

    the Poulenc setting of each poem. Then, after individually considering both settings, I

    will conclude with a section that compares the two settings of each poem. In analyzing

    the settings, I will observe the tonality, melodic line, rhythm, tempo, accompaniment,

    harmonies, and text painting. I will consider how the accompaniment colors the text, the

    intervals in the melodic line, and the motifs in the melody and accompaniment. When

    necessary, I will include musical figures to serve as examples of the particular aspects of

    my analysis.

  • 8

    III. Biographical Background

    a. Guillaume Apollinaire (1880-1918)

    Guillaume Apollinaire Kostrowitzky was born in Rome on August 26, 1880. He

    was the illegitimate child of Angelica de Kostrowitzky, a Polish women. His father is not

    known for certain, although it is known that he was an Italian man.19 His mother moved

    around frequently with him and his brother Albert, and once the boys reached school age,

    their mother sent them to the French Riviera for Catholic schooling. During his school

    years, Apollinaire made friends with other aspiring poets and was exposed to the poetry

    of such greats as Racine, Verlaine, and Mallarm. After completing school, Apollinaire

    found a job as a tutor for the daughter of a German noblewoman. The job was ideal in

    that Apollinaire was able to travel and read extensively.20

    Apollinaire settled in Paris with his mother in 1902. He worked in a bank and

    spent a significant amount of his free time with emerging artists such as Picasso, Marie

    Laurencin, and Max Jacob. At this time, he adopted the name Guillaume Apollinaire and

    contributed to a variety of literary outletserotic literature, childrens books, poetry, and

    newspaper articles. He founded a literary review, Le Festin dEsope, and was

    significantly involved in the Parisian literary world.21

    Apollinaires first set of poetry, Le Bestiaire, appeared in a book, along with

    Raoul Dufys accompanying woodcuts, in 1911. He was quickly perceived as a talented

    young author with many unique qualities. To Apollinaires distress, however, he was

    accused of stealing the Mona Lisa from the Louvre in the same year. He was held in

    19 Some accounts claim that Apollinaire was possibly fathered by a Cardinal or even a Pope. More recent biographies suggest Francesco Flugi dAspermont, a high ranked Italian officer, as Apollinaires father. 20 Richard Shattuck. Introduction to Selected Writings of Guillaume Apollinaire, by Guillaume Apollinaire (New York: New Directions Publishing, 1971), 7. 21 Shattuck, Selected Writings of Guillaume Apollinaire, 7.

  • 9

    prison for six days before being released. Even after his release, he was perturbed by the

    accusation and, in an effort to console him, his friends helped him start another literary

    review, Les Soires de Paris.

    When World War I broke out, Apollinaire became a French citizen in order to

    contribute to the war efforts for France. He became a lieutenant after two years of

    service. In 1916, he was injured by a shell fragment and had to undergo two operations

    on his skull.22 He recovered but was unable to continue serving, so he began to invest

    much of his time in writing. During this time, he worked on the innovative

    Calligrammes, in which he intertwined both words and images to form unique visual

    collages.

    Apollinaire was deeply inspired by love throughout his writing career. He had

    many close friendships with other writers and had several love interests who kept him

    constantly inspired to write. He married one of them, Jacqueline Kolb, in May 1918, and

    the couple lived very happily for several months. Unfortunately, Apollinaire contracted

    the Spanish influenza and died in November of that year. His health was compromised

    due to his wound and the subsequent operations, making him more susceptible to the flu.

    Apollinaire was regarded one of the great symbolist poets of the early twentieth-century

    and served many roles in society. As Robert Shattuck remarks, Apollinaire was

    successively a clown, a scholar, a drunkard, a gourmet, a lover, a criminal, a devout

    Catholic, a wandering Jew, a soldier [and] a good husband.23

    22 Shattuck, Selected Writings of Guillaume Apollinaire, 8. 23 Shattuck, Selected Writings of Guillaume Apollinaire, 5.

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    b. Louis Durey (1888-1979)

    Louis Durey was born in Paris on May 27, 1888. He was the oldest of three

    brothers and was not musically inclined as a child. He decided against piano lessons,

    claiming that it was an activity suited for girls, and worked instead in his fathers printing

    business. However, as Durey grew up, he began to attend many operas. His decision to

    become a composer was greatly influenced by hearing a performance of Claude

    Debussys Pellas et Mlisande in 1907. Debussys opera had such an influence on

    Durey that he did not miss a single performance of the work during its Paris revival for

    the next seven years!24 Durey was no longer satisfied with merely enjoying musiche

    wished to study and write it. He began studying music at the Schola Cantorum, a private

    music school in Paris, and started to compose on his own, his earliest known piece dating

    1914.

    The onset of World War I changed Dureys plans drastically. He reluctantly

    served in the army for sixteen monthsmilitary life and the horror of war appalled

    him.25 During the next couple of years, Durey set several poems to music and began

    composing more often. In 1917, Erik Satie, whom Durey had met at the Schola

    Cantorum, became interested in Dureys compositions and invited him to perform his

    piano duet, Carillons, in a collaborative concert presented by Saties friends, then called

    Les Nouveaux Jeunes.26 The group, including Durey, began meeting at Darius Milhauds

    apartment and were eventually dubbed Les Six. Although Durey felt close friendship

    with the other five composers, he differed from them in that he was greatly influenced by

    24 Marc Wood, Homme de tte, 42. 25 James Harding, The Ox on the Roof, 55. 26 Marc Wood, Homme de tte, 43.

  • 11

    Debussy and other Impressionistic composers. This difference in opinion eventually led

    to Dureys break from Les Six in 1921.

    After his break with Les Six, Durey withdrew from the Parisian music scene to

    Saint Tropez, where his family had a villa. He continued to compose, inspired by the

    warmth and sensuousness of Provence.27 He married Anna Grangeon in 1929 and the

    couple had their only child, Arlette, in 1930, the year the family returned to Paris. After

    returning to Paris, Durey became quite involved in music organizationsFdration

    Musicale Populaire and the Association Franaise des Musiciens Progressivesas well

    as joining the Communist Party in 1936. He was eventually appointed President of the

    Fdration Musicale Populaire.

    Durey returned to Saint Tropez in 1959, due to the destruction of his Paris home,

    and stayed there until his death in 1979. Although Durey continued to compose late into

    his life, his public recognition faded away, especially after he left Les Six.

    27 Wood, Homme de tte, 45.

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    c. Francis Poulenc (1899-1963)

    Francis Poulenc was born in Paris on January 7, 1899. His father Emile was a

    chemical manufacturer. His parents both had a love for the arts. His mother, Jenny,

    played the piano and his father was a music admirer. His parents never missed opening

    night at the opera house. Poulencs mother taught him how to play the piano when he was

    a child. He was considered a prodigy and eventually studied with Ricardo Vies, a

    Spanish virtuoso pianist, who introduced him to Erik Satie and Georges Auric. Vies had

    a profound musical impact on Poulenc and contributed heavily to the formation of

    Poulencs taste as well as his piano technique.28

    Poulenc began composing in 1917 when it was popular to set Negro texts to

    music. His first composition, Rhapsodie Ngre, brought him overnight success in the

    Parisian music scene. That same year, Poulenc was summoned to join the army and

    served in the antiaircraft unit until October 1921. He made several trips back and forth to

    Paris and composed several pieces while serving in the army. In 1919, Poulenc was

    introduced to the illustrated version of Guillaume Apollinaires Le Bestiaire poetery.

    Poulenc decided to set a number of the poems to music, inciting a deep admiration for

    Apollinaires poetry.

    Around this time, Poulenc began to identify with Les Six. He benefited greatly

    from his friendship with the other composers in the group, although he differed from

    them artistically. After his ballet Les Biches received favorable review in 1924, he split

    from Les Six, due to personal conflict with Erik Satie. Over the next several years,

    Poulenc composed a variety of works for various instruments. He turned to Apollinaire

    28Vivian Wood. Poulencs Songs: An Analysis of Style. (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1979), 11.

  • 13

    texts once again in 1931 and felt that composing to Apollinaires poetry yielded

    significantly more inspired art songs.29

    Poulencs song output increased significantly when he met the French baritone

    Pierre Bernac in 1935. The two collaborated for many years, and Poulenc remarked that

    he learned the art of song writing by accompanying Bernac.30 Much of Poulencs song

    output came from this timehe wrote 86 of his 146 songs between 1935 and 1956. He

    then began to slow his composing. Poulenc wrote his opera Dialogues des Carmlites

    between 1953 and 1957, while he was experiencing severe depression. His depression

    was so profound that he was skeptical as to whether he would be able to finish the opera.

    He completed the opera, but his depression persisted throughout the rest of his life.

    Francis Poulenc died of a heart attack in Paris on January 30, 1963.

    29 Vivian Wood, Poulencs songs: An Analysis of Style, 19.30 Vivian Wood, Poulencs songs: An Analysis of Style, 19.

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    d. Raoul Dufy (1877-1953)

    Raoul Dufy was born in Le Havre, France, on June 3, 1877. His was one of nine

    children in his family. His father owned a metal business and was an amateur musician.

    He had a great impact on his childrens love of music and the arts. Unfortunately, the

    Dufy family was poor, so Raoul could not attend concerts as often as his peers. He,

    however, did not miss the Sunday Colonne concerts, concerts featuring modern music of

    the time, and, in fact would often go without supper for the luxury of those two hours of

    music.31

    Dufys artistic talent was apparent at an early age, but he had to find a way to help

    support his family rather than taking art classes. He worked for a coffee-importing firm at

    the age of fourteen and at the age of fifteen was able to enroll at the Municipal School of

    Fine Arts taught by Charles Lhuillier.32 He took classes at night so that he could continue

    to work during the day. Dufy became quite skillful and, in fact, became determined to

    change hands and learn how to draw with his left hand. He became so skilled that he

    was noted to have been able to paint two different subjects simultaneously, one with each

    hand!33

    In 1900, Dufy was awarded a grant to study at the renowned Ecole des Beaux-

    Arts in Paris. He studied there for four years, although he grew impatient with the

    teaching philosophy to perfect the system and produce art to please the whole.34 After

    completing his four years, Dufy began to attend exhibits of contemporary art. He found

    that he resonated with the likes of Monet, Pissarro, and Raffalli and began sketching

    31 Jacques Lassaigne, Dufy: Biographical and Critical Studies (Geneva: Skira, 1954), 15. 32 Dora Prez-Tibi. "Dufy, Raoul." In Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online, http://www.oxfordartonline.com/subscriber/article/grove/art/T023961 (accessed November 29, 2010).33 Lassaigne, Dufy, 16. 34 Lassaigne, Dufy, 17.

  • 15

    everyday subjectsnot just models. His first one-man show opened in 1906 and Dufy

    began to gain favor with the public, selling several of his paintings. As he began to

    resonate with the cubist movement, he experienced a decline in public interest and

    decided to pursue different artistic techniquesthe woodcut, specifically. He

    experienced great success in his collaborative efforts with Guillaume Apollinaire to

    produce woodcuts for the latters poetry set, Le Bestiaire. For the next several years,

    Dufy made a comfortable living researching and making woodcuts, as well as

    maintaining his own studio.35

    From the 1920s on, Dufy began to travel to and from Italy and also to the United

    States. He was asked to create a mural painting for the Electricity Pavilion in the Paris

    International Exhibition in 1937, which ended up being the largest in the world at the

    time.36 Around this time, he began to suffer from rheumatic pains and painted less

    frequently. Dufy had to take several weeks off at a time to recover, yet his work did not

    lack quality. As soon as he felt better, he resumed his work.

    In 1952, after consulting with many doctors in Venice, Boston, and Arizona, he

    moved to Forcalquier, France, which suited his health needs because of its dry climate. In

    the same year, he won the International Prize for Painting, and the Muse dArt et

    dHistoire of Geneva assembled the largest public exhibition of his works. Dufy died

    shortly thereafter, on March 3, 1953, of a heart attack.

    35 Lassaigne, Dufy, 17. 36 Raymond Cogniat, Raoul Dufy (New York: Crown Publishers, 1962), 25.

  • 16

    IV. Le BestiaireThe Union of the Poem and the Woodcut

    Apollinaire wrote most of Le Bestiaire in 1907 while living in Paris. He was an

    avid reader, particularly interested in magic, theosophy, and medieval history, and was

    fascinated by the bestiaries of the middle ages with their elaborately illuminated

    manuscripts.37 He decided to make a modern-day bestiary. It was published shortly

    thereafter and in 1911 the poems, paired with Dufys woodcuts, were published. The 30-

    poem set is composed of 26 animals divided into four sections (land dwellers, insects, sea

    dwellers, and winged creatures) and four Orpheus poems, each one introducing a section

    of animals. For the most part, the Bestiary poems are quatrains; four of the poems are

    cinquains. Nearly each line of poetry is octosyllabic (having eight syllables), but is not

    always in keeping with the tetrameter pattern typical of octosyllabic poetry.

    On the surface, the Bestiary poems seem lighthearted and jovialafter all, they

    concern a procession of animalsbut under the surface lie more profound implications.

    Apollinaires poems span many themes. Some of them are autobiographical, while others

    are amusing. A couple of the poems concern political themes, while several offer a

    glimpse into Apollinaires religious views. He comments on his faith and its impact on

    his art in his Bestiary notes:

    Those who essay the art of poetry search for and love that perfection which is God Himself. Would this divine goodness, this supreme perfection abandon those who devote their lives to revealing His glory? It seems impossible. To my mind, poets have the right to hope that when they die they will attain the enduring happiness that comes with a complete knowledge of God, that is, of sublime beauty.38 37 Graham Johnson. "Louis DureyNeglected Member of Les Six" essay in accompanying booklet, Songs by Louis Durey performed by Franois Le Roux and Graham Johnson. Hyperion CDA67257, 2000, compact disc, 17. 38 Guillaume Apollinaire. Bestiary: The Parade of Orpheus, trans. Pepe Karmel (Boston: David Godine, 1980), 65-66.

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    Aside from the structure of the poems, it is also important to consider the crucial role of

    the woodcut in interpreting the poetry.

    Le Bestiaire was conceived as a livre dartist (artists book), a 20th century

    French genre in which the artist's contribution is not just illustration but can be regarded

    as a free interpretation or the way the artist has rendered the text in visual terms.39

    Apollinaire had originally planned to collaborate with Pablo Picasso, his close friend.

    Picasso, however, was too busy to participate, so Apollinaire asked Dufy, a painter who

    had been referred to him by his friend Andr Derain.40 Apollinaire and Dufy worked

    closely together to ensure the fluidity of the poem and the woodcut. This unique

    collaboration was extremely successful in that the poem and woodcut essentially function

    as oneone picks up where the other leaves off. Therefore, this following section will

    examine the poems in the order that they appear in Apollinaires set and, in doing so,

    consider the woodcuts and their important role in interpreting the poems.

    39 University of Calgary Libraries and Cultural Resources, Special Collections: Glossary, U. of Calgary, http://specialcollections.ucalgary.ca/home/glossary (accessed July 9, 2010). 40 Johnson, Louis Durey, 17.

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    a. Le chvre du Thibet

    For all this goats fine wool,

    Or even Jasons hardwon fleece,

    I wouldnt trade a single hair

    From the head of my beloved.

    The Tibetan goat is the fourth creature in Orpheus procession. In this poem of

    happy love, the poet expresses his adoration for his beloved by claiming that her locks are

    far more precious to him than the fine wool of the Tibetan goat or even Jasons hardwon

    fleece.41 As Wilfrid Mellers remarks, the poem counters Jasons epic aspiration with

    the modest assertion that the locks of the poets girl far outshine those of both goat and

    legendary hero.42 This simplistic, innocent portrayal of love is later contrasted with

    more distorted images of love in other Bestiaire poemsLe serpent, La mduse and

    La puce.

    The Jason that Apollinaire refers to in this poem is one of Greek mythological

    origin. In order to become king of Iolcus, Jason had to retrieve golden fleece from King

    Aeetes of Colchis. The King was extremely possessive of the fleecein fact, it was

    guarded by a serpent that never slept. After enduring many setbacks and encountering

    many dangers, Jason returned to Iolcus with the fleece and was crowned King. Through

    alluding to mythology, Apollinaire draws a comparison between his beloved and Jasons

    beloved possessionthe golden fleece.

    In the woodcut appearing above the poem, a goat is in the foreground with an

    oriental-style building on top of a bridge in the background. As is common in many of

    41 Guillaume Apollinaire, Bestiary: The Parade of Orpheus, 8. 42 Wilfrid Mellers, Francis Poulenc (New York: Oxford University Press, 1993), 3-4.

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    the Bestiary woodcuts, the images surrounding the creature indicate the location of the

    scene. The Buddhist temple, the arched bridge, and the towering mountains in Le

    chvre du Thibet prove Willard Bohns assertion that one scarcely needs to consult the

    title to identify the country in question.43

    43 Bohn, Contemplating Apollinaires Bestiaire, 48.

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    b. Le dromadaire

    With his four dromedaries

    Don Pedro dAlfaroubeira

    Traveled the world and marveled.

    He did what I would do,

    If I had four dromedaries.

    The dromedary, the tenth creature in the procession, is an animal similar to a

    camel, but smaller and faster. The Greek word dromos refers to swiftness. Richard

    Barber notes that a dromedary can cover a hundred miles or more in one day.44 Le

    Dromadaire differs from most of the other animal poems in that it is a cinquain; Le

    Chat is the only other animal poem that also has five lines.

    The real focal point of this poem, however, is not the dromedary but its owner,

    Don Pedro, with his dreams, his adventurousness, even his vulgar curiosity: qualities

    deflated by the fact that most people dont possess one dromedary, let alone four.45

    According to Apollinaires notes, Don Pedro dAlfaroubeira, Infante of Portugal, traveled

    all over the world. Don Pedro and his twelve companions rode four dromedaries and,

    after passing through Spain, went to Norway and, from there, to Babylon and the Holy

    Land.46 The caravan journeyed all over Europe and into portions of Africa and Asia.

    The voyage was lengthyDon Pedro finally returned to Portugal after three years and

    four months of traveling. The poet admires Don Pedro for possessing four dromedaries

    and for his sense of adventure. He remarks that he, too, would travel if he had four

    44 Richard Barber, Bestiary (Rochester, Ny: Boydell and Brewer Inc., 1993), 101. 45 Mellers, Francis Poulenc, 3. 46 Guillaume Apollinaire, Bestiary: The Parade of Orpheus, 64.

  • 21

    dromedaries. Similar to Le chvre du Thibet, Apollinaire cites a historical figure in

    drawing an analogy between himself and that figure.

    Similar to the Le chvre woodcut, the dromedarys surroundings indicate the

    location of the scene. The dromedary is standing on sand dunes. There are palm trees in

    the foreground and two pyramids in the background. These two clues, especially the

    pyramids, indicate that the scene is set in Egypt. Again, this woodcut serves as an

    important tool for the reader not only picturing the dromedary, but identifying its

    surroundings as well.

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    c. La sauterelle

    See the fine grasshopper,

    That nourished Saint John.

    May my verses be like him,

    A feast for the best of men.

    The last of the insects, the grasshopper is the seventeenth creature in the

    procession. Historically, grasshoppers (or locusts) have been considered both a blessing

    and a curse to man. They are a source of nourishment but can also devastate crops. In the

    Old TestamentExodus, specificallythe locust infestation was the eighth plague sent

    by God to punish Egypt (Pharaoh) for holding the Israelites in captivity.47 La

    sauterelle, however, regards grasshoppers in high esteemas nourishment for men.

    In La sauterelle, the speaker shares his aspiration for his poetry to sustain

    intellectualsthe best of men. The poet wishes for his verses to be as nourishing to his

    readers as grasshoppers (or locusts) were to St. John. Apollinaire, in his notes, cites a

    verse from the book of Mark: Now John was clothed with camels hair and wore a

    leather belt around his waist and ate locusts and wild honey.48 The verse aids in painting

    a vivid picture of the poets analogy and also providing a religious context for the poem.

    In the woodcut, the grasshopper is perched at the bottom of a hill surrounded by

    vegetation. There are houses on top of the hill and it appears to be sunny. The

    sauterelle woodcut is different from many of the woodcuts in that it appears more

    47 Exod. 10:14-15 48 Mark 1:6 (English Standard Version)

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    delicate than most of the woodcuts portraying vertebrates. The grasshopper is outlined in

    black, rather than filled in with solid black like most of the other woodcuts.49

    49 Bohn, Contemplating Apollinaires Bestiaire, 47.

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    d. Le dauphin

    Dolphins, you play in the sea,

    But the waves are always bitter.

    Do I sometimes laugh with joy?

    Life is still cruel.

    The dolphin, the nineteenth creature in the procession, is the first of the sea

    dwellers. As the poem reinforces, the dolphin is a symbol of naivety and joy. Ernst

    Lehner notes that the dolphin was considered a kindly sea monster in antiquity, servant

    of the gods and helper to man.50 In Greek mythology, Apollo cherished the dolphin

    he and other gods rode dolphins on the waves of the sea.

    Specific to this poem, the dolphin plays in the sea despite its bitterness. The poet

    draws a parallel between the life of the dolphin and his own life. Although enduring a

    cruel existence, the poet still finds reasons to laugh with joy, as the dolphin plays in the

    sea despite its treacherous waves. Wilfred Mellers draws a comparison between the

    dolphin and Don Pedro (of Le dromadaire) in that they are both adventurers through

    uncharted territories.51 The poet, once again, admires the adventurous quality of the

    creature and, in a way, lives vicariously through the dolphins joyful frolicking through

    the bitter sea.

    The dolphin woodcut portrays the dolphin in its natural elementthe ocean.

    There is a steamship in the background, with smoke billowing out from its funnel. The

    bitter waves are portrayed in a choppy manner, surrounding the boat and the dolphin.

    The bow wave in front of the dolphin indicates that the dolphin is moving forward, which 50Ernst and Johanna Lehner, A Fantastic Bestiary: Beasts and Monsters in Myth and Folklore (New York: Tudor, 1969), 137. 51 Mellers, Francis Poulenc, 4.

  • 25

    symbolizes the poets life moving forward despite setbacks. Bohn notes that the waves

    in Le Dauphinseem to have been influenced by Japanese block prints.52 This

    indicates Dufys insight into the various woodcut techniques he was researching while

    working on the Bestiaire project.

    52 Bohn, Contemplating Apollinaires Bestiaire,48.

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    e. L'crevisse

    Uncertainty,

    O my joys,

    Like crayfish we advance

    Backwards, backwards.

    The crayfish is the 22nd creature in Apollinaires procession. Scott Bates asserts

    that crayfish are a noted symbol of inconstancy.53 There are simple, yet profound

    implications in Lcrevisse. As Roger Shattuck remarks, The movement of a crayfish

    is familiar to most of us, and once the relationship has been pointed out to us between the

    tentative gestures of human uncertainty and the backward motion of a crayfish, we

    rejoice in the felicity of the association.54 The poet in his hesitance hinders himself from

    progressing and, like the crayfish, finds himself backtracking. The we mentioned in the

    third line might suggest that the poet is either referring to himself and a lover, or

    humanity in general.

    The crayfish woodcut is noticeably different from many of the others in that its

    background is predominately black, while the others are white. La Carpe, the

    following creature in the procession, shares the same reverse effect. This technique is

    effective in that it emphasizes the figure of the crayfish in the foreground. The viewer can

    easily see the crayfishs intricate details: pincers, eight legs, eyes and tail. It is interesting

    to note that the crayfish is not in what would be considered its natural environment (the

    sea, sand, etc.). Rather, it is superimposed among branches and leaves. Bohn observes

    53 Scott Bates, Guillaume Apollinaire (New York: Twayne Publishers, 1967), 157. 54 Shattuck, Selected Writings of Guillaume Apollinaire, 34.

  • 27

    that the crayfish woodcut resembles a main course in a restaurant surprisingly

    elegant.55

    55 Bohn, Contemplating Apollinaires Bestiary, 47.

  • 28

    f. La carpe

    Carp, how long you live

    In your crowded pools!

    Fish of melancholy,

    Does death forget you?

    The carp is the 23rd figure in the processionthe last of the sea dwellers. In this

    poem, it is portrayed as an immortal creature, one that patiently awaits death, to no avail.

    Mellers comments that the carp, in their living death, are other than human in being

    beyond consciousness, and therefore beyond good and evil.56 There are more

    complicated implications of this poem than what initially meets the eye, so the woodcut

    for La carpe is especially key to fully understanding the depth of this poem.

    In interpreting the woodcut, one observes the large carp in a small pool,

    surrounded by leaves and flowers. The carp appears as if it has just jumped out of the

    water. In the background there is a palace, which Bohn reveals that, under close

    scrutinythe scene takes place in the gardens at Versailles, near the Orangerie.57 The

    poet and visual artist both lived in Paris, so the usage of a familiar Parisian scene both

    pays homage to their city of residence and evokes a sense of nostalgia. Bohn remarks that

    like the lion, the carp calls to mind Frances rich history and symbolizes a glorious ideal

    that has become obsoleteit [the carp] has witnessed the decline of royalty and the rise

    of modern democratic society.58

    56 Mellers, Francis Poulenc, 5. 57 Bohn, Contemplating Apollinaires Bestiary, 50. 58 Bohn, Contemplating Apollinaires Bestiary, 51.

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    V. Le BestiaireSong-by-Song Commentary and Analysis

    This comparative analysis of Durey and Poulencs settings of Le Bestiaire will

    include the six common pieces that the composers composed.

    Both Durey and Poulenc eventually scored their Bestiaires in two versions, for

    piano and voice and for voice and instrumental ensemble. Durey wrote for baritone, two

    flutes, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, horn, string quintet and doubling celesta. This version,

    however, was not completed until around 1958. Poulenc originally scored his

    instrumental Bestiary for baritone, flute, clarinet, bassoon, and string quartethe later

    condensed it into a piano and voice arrangement.

    An obvious difference between the two settings is that Durey aimed for the

    completeness of setting all 26 animal poems to music, while Poulenc chose twelve, and

    eventually only six, poems to set. It is possible that Dureys completeness was to his

    detriment; Poulencs settings were better received and, in the long run, more popular.59

    Poulenc and Durey were both surprised to discover that they composed to the

    same poem set. Interestingly, both Poulenc and Dureys cycles were performed in

    Dureys apartment sometime in 1919.60 The men maintained an amiable relationship; the

    two exchanged letters even through the late 1950s, fondly recalling memories together

    particularly those involving Le Bestiaire.

    Durey composed his Bestiary from March to July 1919. Although he did not set

    music to the four Orpheus poems, he dedicated his focus to the whole of the 26 animal

    poems: It was not as easy as it looked at first glance, because, though some of them

    59 Marc Wood, Homme de Tte, 44. 60 Johnson, Songs by Louis Durey, 12.

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    called irresistibly for music, others, on the contrary, proved more daunting for me.61 He

    kept the poems in the same order that Apollinaire had included them in Le Bestiaire.

    Durey himself believed that his settings of Le chvre du Thibet and La carpe could

    be paralleled with Poulencs settings of the same poems.62 His piano and voice version

    was written first and his chamber version was not written until 1958.

    Poulenc met Apollinaire in 1917, at the premire of Saties ballet, Parade.63

    Poulenc developed a sincere affinity with Apollinaires poetry and Le Bestiaire

    prompted a lifetime of Poulenc setting it to music. Poulenc considered it extremely

    important for Apollinaires voice to be heard through his music. In Poulencs Diary of

    My Songs, he writes of treasuring a letter from renowned painter and Apollinaires

    colleague, Marie Laurencin, saying that [his] songs had the sound of Guillaumes

    voice.64 Pierre Bernac, who collaborated musically with Poulenc, comments on the

    importance of the unity of the poem and the melody:

    I myself feel that the poetic melancholy in such songs is often tinged with humour to hide the depths of feeling behind it, as though the poet and the musician were smiling at their own sensibility. However this may be, the drollery and irony must never be heightened and stressed, but always the tenderness, the lyricism, the poetry. 65

    Poulenc composed his Bestiary between February and May 1919 while serving in the

    military. Graham Johnson asserts that Poulencs setting is simply two-bar phrases

    stitched together.66 His first version for an instrumental ensemble and voice was nearly

    replaced in the public eye by his version for piano and voice. He remarks in his Diary of 61 Louis Durey, Catalogue Comment, translated by Isabelle Battioni. 62 Johnson, Songs by Louis Durey, 30. 63 Mellers, Francis Poulenc, 2. 64 Francis Poulenc and Winifred Radford, Diary of My Songs (London: Victor Gollancz Ltd., 1986.), 21. 65 Bernac, Pierre, Winifred Radford, and Sir Lennox Berkeley, Francis Poulenc: The Man and His Songs (Great Britain: Kahn & Averill Publishers, 2002), 51. 66 Graham Johnson and Richard Stokes, A French Song Companion (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000), 350.

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    My Songs that it is a shame his settings are so often heard with piano that the original

    has been forgotten.67

    In considering the six poems included in this study, there are some notable

    differences between the settings. First of all, Poulencs set does not follow the same order

    as Dureys (or Apollinaires, for that matter). He begins with Le Dromadaire instead of

    Le Chvre du Thibet and then continues the set in the correct order. There are also

    notable differences in tempo indications, which, in turn affect the characterization of the

    animal. Dureys Le Dauphin is traquille (tranquil) while Poulencs is anime

    (animated). Graham Johnson, in his notes, remarks the friendly grace of [Dureys]

    dolphin is perhaps better caught than in Poulencs jollier setting.68 Also, Dureys

    LExcrevisse is timide (timid), while Poulencs is assez vif (rather fast). These

    differences affect how the text is portrayed through song. The character of both the

    animal and the poet is sometimes interpreted differently by each of the composers.

    Another distinction is that Dureys Le Dromadaire is light, while Poulencs seems to

    tread slowly along, with slow movement associated with camels.

    The following analyses will further examine the intricacies of each setting as well

    as the similarities and differences between the two composers settings.

    67 Poulenc, Diary of my songs, 21.68 Johnson, Songs by Louis Durey, 31.

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    Le Chvre du ThibetDurey

    In this tender setting of Apollinaires love poem, Durey places both hands in the

    treble clef, for the most part, except for in measures 11 and 12. The treble sound aptly

    expresses the tenderness of the text and the poets sincere admiration for his lover and her

    locks of hair.

    At first glance, it is difficult to determine the key of this piece. Upon closer

    examination, however, the piece seems to be grounded in C minorthe C minor chord is

    repeated throughout. The motif introduced in the first four measures appears in several

    places throughout Le Chvre du Thibet. It is repeated an octave lower in measures 5-8,

    a fifth lower at measure 11, and an octave lower in measure 15. The final bars of the

    piece, akin to the first several bars, ascend until the motif is played an octave higher than

    the original appearance. Starting in measure 17, the time signature shifts between 3/4 and

    2/4, eventually settling into 3/4 for the last two measures. .

    Fig. 1 Le Chvre du Thibet, mm. 1-4

    The dynamic indications for both the vocalist and the accompanist are very

    subdued in Le Chvre du Thibet. The piece begins at pianissimo and ends at pianissimo

    possible (ppp). The dynamic increases gradually as the vocal line enters and decreases

    when the voice exits at measure 17. Beginning at measure 12, the voice crescendos,

  • 33

    along with the piano, to add extra emphasis to the tender last line of poetry: Des cheveux

    dont je suis pris (From the head of my beloved).

    The vocal line is a fourth down from the right hand of the accompaniment at the

    vocal entrance in measures 4-6. The vocal line and accompaniment slow at measure ten

    and return to a tempo in measure 11 as the motif in the accompaniment returns to the

    premier figure, a fifth lower.

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    Le Chvre du ThibetPoulenc

    Poulenc also opted for a minor tonality in his setting of Le Chvre du Thibet.

    As the vocal line and accompaniment enter on the pick up note, the G minor tonality is

    immediately established. The accompaniment, carrying mainly eighth-note values, is to

    be played evenly, as is the vocal line. The bass line has a walking-bass sequence that

    plods along in measures 2, 3, 6, and 7.

    For the most part the vocal line oscillates between two notes. The largest interval

    in Le Chevre is a major third. There are few dotted rhythmspredominantly, straight

    rhythms are sung. The accompaniment is simple, yet effective: measures 2, 3, 6 and 7 and

    identical, as are measures 4 and 5. The first two lines set up a comparison for the last two

    lines: the golden coat of the goat that Jason pursued is nothing compared to the hair of the

    poets lover.

    Fig. 2 Le Chvre du Thibet, mm. 4-5

    The climatic part of this poem is introduced in the sforzando placed over the word

    Jason in measure four. It is interesting that Jason is emphasized in this way. It is

    puzzling to consider why Poulenc would make an allusion in the poem the loudest word

    in the song. Durey chose to emphasize the last lineabout the poets loverinstead. As

  • 35

    the voice backs off of its sforzando, the piano, as Mellers puts it, flowers in two bars

    embroidering a chord of the dominant thirteenth with grace-notes.69 These two bars, 4

    and 5, played with les 2 pdales, reflect drastic dynamic changes, as the accompaniment

    decrescendos from a mezzo forte to a pianissimo in each measure.

    69 Mellers, Francis Poulenc, 4.

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    Le DromadaireDurey

    Dureys use of the Dorian scale gives this piece an Arabic feel, which, along with

    the text and the woodcut, further reveals the location of the Don Pedro and his

    dromedaries journey. The piece starts out at a lively pace in F Dorian and the middle-

    Eastern tonality is emphasized when the right hand plays the scale up a fifth and back

    down in measures 3-5. The scale is again played in measure 10-12, in octaves, before the

    interlude that introduces Eb tonality. In measure 13, the key seems to shift and the left

    hand begins playing E-flats in octaves for the duration of the piecea pedal point, of

    sorts.

    Fig. 3 Le Dromadaire, mm. 3-5

    The vocalist acts as an enthusiastic storyteller in imparting information with

    spirit about Don Pedro and his caravan. The voice emulates the five-note F Dorian scale

    previously introduced in the accompaniment. To the same effect, the rhythm and melody

    of the vocal line in measures 6-13 complement the sense of grandiloquence conveyed in

    the text. Conversely, the change of character in measures 16-24 conveys a sense of

    humility. The accompaniment and voice are both given a piano dynamic and the vocal

    line becomes a bit more fluid; the note values are longer and less percussive. The

    accompaniment has a similar sound to the A section, however the chords in the right

    hand are played in a higher range. The change in character comes with the poets, and in

  • 37

    this case, the singers realization that he will never own four dromedaries or travel all

    over the world, for that matter. This change reflects the change in the text. For the first

    three lines, the poet is telling about Don Pedro. In the last two lines, starting at measure

    16, he is telling about himself and his desire to also explore the world.

    Fig. 4 Le Dromadaire, mm. 13-15

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    Le Dromadaire--Poulenc

    Poulencs Le Dromadaire differs from the rest of his collection in that it is his

    only Bestiaire setting not in the 4/4 time signature; it is set in 2/4, as is Dureys setting. It

    is also the longest of Poulencs Bestiaire settingsby thirty measuresperhaps to

    establish Don Pedros lengthy voyage and the dromedaries weighted stride. Also, Le

    Dromadaire is the only Poulenc Bestiary piece with a substantial interlude of seven

    measures.

    Throughout the majority of the piece, the left hand plays in 16th-note chromatics.

    The dromedary, trudging along, appears throughout the piece in what will be referred to

    as the A section: measures 1-14, 22-33, and 37-39. The B-like section appears at the

    mention of Don Pedro in measures 15-22 and the poet at measures 34-36. The vocal line

    also reflects the distinct sections in the piece. The melody is the same in measures 11-14

    and 30-33. The melody of the B section is similar at both of its appearances in

    measures 15-22 and 34-37.

    The first three lines of poetry are separated from the last two by an interlude.

    Durey opted for this as well. The first three lines of poetry are declarativefacts about

    Don Pedro and his dromedaries. The last two lines express the poets admiration for Don

    Pedros sense of adventure. The ascending vocal line in measures 15-17 is accompanied

    by an ascending progression of chordsE major, F major, G major, A minor, B

    diminished and C majorbefore descending. The straight rhythms in the vocal line

    throughout the piece adds to what Wilfrid Mellers calls the cumbersome lollop of the

  • 39

    dromedary.70 The voice trods along with the accompaniment as if Don Pedro and his

    dromedary had tired of their long journey.

    What is perhaps most interesting about Le Dromadaire is the quirky coda that

    concludes the piece in a bright E major tonality. At the coda, in measures 40-43, the

    tempo more than doubles in speed to an allegro. The drastic change in style suggests that

    a change has taken place with either Don Pedro and his dromedaries or the poetperhaps

    both. Whereas the majority of the piece sounds weighted, the last four measures seem

    unburdened and free. Perhaps Don Pedro has reached the end of his long journey, or the

    composers mind escapes into an adventurous daydream. The dynamics do not come

    below mezzo forte. It is interesting that the dromedarys pace seems so slowespecially

    since the animal is supposed to be swift.

    Fig. 5 Le Dromadaire, mm. 40-43

    It is interesting to consider the primary interpretive difference in the setting of Le

    Dromadaire. While Poulenc seems to have focused primarily on the cumbersome

    lollop of the dromedary, Durey paid particular attention to the contrast between the

    pompous Don Pedro and the humble poet.

    70 Mellers, Francis Poulenc, 3.

  • 40

    La SauterelleDurey

    The tempo marking is chantant, in singing style, which is precisely what comes

    across when this piece is played and listened to. The key is firmly grounded in E minor

    from the time the piano opens the piece by playing the motive, the vocal melody an

    octave up, over a series of diminished ii and tonic chords. The voice enters at measure

    seven repeating the motive an octave lower. Two phrases are sung, and then, starting at

    measure 14, the accompaniment once again plays the motive an octave higher as an

    interlude between couplets of the text. Most of the left-hand is played in the treble clef,

    with the exception of measures 8-14 and measure 25. The left hand accompanies the

    melody in the right hand with the same chords, but this time plays them in an arpeggiated

    manner. At the vocal lines next entrance at measure 21, the accompaniment harmonizes

    in thirds with the half note right-hand sequence. Once again, the motive reappears as the

    vocalist sings the last phrase, and then an octave higher, ending the piece on a solid E

    minor chord in second inversion.

    Fig. 6 La Sauterelle, mm. 1-5

    The predominant dynamic for much of this piece is piano. Three of the four lines

    of poetry are sung at this dynamic. Arguably the most important line, the final line, is to

    be sung at forte. This drastic change in dynamics, along with the higher tessitura of the

    vocal line, adds extra emphasis to the poets lofty aspiration to create poetry that will

    sustain the best of men.

  • 41

    Out of the six Durey pieces analyzed in this study, La Sauterelle has the largest

    vocal range, from E above middle C to G above the staff

  • 42

    La Sauterelle--Poulenc

    The shortest of Poulencs Le Bestiaire compositions, La Sauterelle is only four

    measures long. Another distinguishing factor is that the tessitura in La Sauterelle lies

    significantly higher than in the other Poulenc Bestiaire compositions. The

    accompaniment and vocal line begin and end together, with no prelude or postlude.

    Poulenc indicates that the piece is to be Lent (slow), but also souple (flexible). It is

    important for the singer and the accompanist to be playing in a complementary manner.

    The accompaniment in Poulencs La Sauterelle is simple in that of the four

    measures, the accompaniment in measures one and three are the same, and measures two

    and four are the same (with the addition of the octave played in the right hand in measure

    four). In measures one and three, the bass moves up and down in alternating fourths and

    fifths. On each beat of measures one and three, both hands play in intervals of a minor

    seventh and a major third. Along with the vocal line, the soprano and alto notes move

    down by half steps. The pedals serve a significant role in this piece. Poulenc indicates

    that La Sauterelle is to be played with les deux pdales, or with the damper and soft

    pedal, right and left respectively.

    Fig. 7 La Sauterelle, mm. 1-2

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    The vocal line begins in a line descending by half-steps as if to gesture downward

    to the fine grasshopper itself. Although the accompaniment is consistent in that every

    other measure is uniform, there seem to be two distinct sections in the vocal line: the first

    two lines of poetry discuss the significance of the grasshopper and the last two lines

    express the poets desires to produce substantial/significant poetic output. Pierre Bernac

    suggests that the accompanist and singer take an expressive breath after the second bar

    in order to accommodate the contrast.71

    La Sauterelle is a very quiet, almost muffled piece. The singer and accompanist

    begin at a piano dynamic in measures one and two. The accompaniment remains at piano

    in measures three and four while the singer decreases her dynamic to pianissimo. This

    effectively imparts a sense of hushed intimacy to convey the seriousness of the poets

    aspiration. In the same way, the whispered dynamic serves to convey the humility and

    privacy of the poet in divulging his lofty aspirations.

    71 Pierre Bernac, The Interpretation of French Song (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1970), 278.

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    Le DauphinDurey

    The accompaniment in Le Dauphin, with the right hand only, is thin, but

    effectively conveys the sparkling brilliance of the dolphin and its glimmering waters.

    Like Dureys Le Chvre du Thibet and La Sauterelle, the majority of the piece is

    played in the treble clef. The six-note arpeggiated figure throughout the piece has a

    smooth harp-like feel. It begins based upon the pentatonic scale, D E F# A and B,

    undergoes a series of tonality shifts, starting at measure four, and gradually descends an

    octave in measure 18, before slowing slightly and returning to the premier figure in

    measure 20.

    Fig. 8 Le Dauphin, mm. 1-2

    The tempo marking tranquille is especially suitable for the calm, ethereal feel of

    this piece. The sustaining pedal adds to the feeling of the smooth flow of the tide and aids

    in maintaining a seamless consistency in the accompaniment from measure to measure.

    There is an inconsistent number of measures between vocal phrases, which makes the

    piece sound conversational and spontaneous, to an extent.

    At the mention of joy in measures 15-17, the vocal line crescendos and the line

    ascends to an E, the highest note in the piece. In the following line, the voice ascends to a

    D on the word cruelle (cruel), which perhaps indicates that although the poets (and

    dauphins) existence is cruel, the joy far outweighs the cruelty.

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    Le DauphinPoulenc

    In contrast to Dureys whimsical setting, Poulencs Le Dauphin is portrayed as

    animated creature. Marked Anim, this piece emulates a lively creature of the seas,

    leaping in and out of the water. The introduction in the accompaniment progresses

    through a I, iii, IV, V chord progression in A major and at measure four plays what could

    be interpreted as the bitterness of the sea in seconds. It is in measure four, and again in

    measure 13, that the pedal is introduced. The other 11 bars of the piece, however, are

    clearly marked sans pdale.

    Throughout the mlodie, the left hand of the accompaniment plays the vocal line

    in the treble clef while the right hand plays chromatic minor thirds. The interval of

    fourths is predominant in the vocal linein measures 5-6, 8, and 9-10. The jumping of

    fourths, in measures 5-6 and 9-10, further adds to the liveliness that the composer

    indicates. To that end, Pierre Bernac suggests that the singer should make contrasts

    according to the meaning of the text lines one and three [measures 5-6 and 9-10] mf and

    rhythmic; lines two and four [measures 7-8 and 11-12] p and legato, with an expressive

    stress on the syllable cruelle.72

    Fig. 9 Le Dauphin, mm. 5-6

    72 Bernac, Interpretation of French Song, 279.

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    Le Dauphin has a sing-song quality that convinces the listener that the creature

    is rather content, if not happy, playing in the waves. The only hint of dissonance or

    bitterness in the piece is conveyed in the major seconds played in measures 4 and 13.

    Other than that, the piece has an extremely joyful sound. Poulencs Dauphin seems to

    have managed looking past the bitter waves of the sea and enjoying its life.

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    LcrevisseDurey

    The Timide tempo marking aptly expresses the uncertainty and hesitant nature of

    the poet as evidenced in the text. The accompaniment prelude sets the precedence of a

    smooth, fluid line that is later emulated in the independent vocal line. The two-bar figure

    is interwoven throughout the piece; it is repeated in measures one and two and is

    repeated several times throughout the piece: down a seventh in measures 6 and 7, down a

    fourth in measures 13-14 and up a fifth in measures 15 and 16.

    Fig. 10 Lcrevisse, mm. 1-2

    Several elements in Dureys Lcrevisse express the backward motion of both

    the crayfish and the poet. The triplet in the aforementioned repeated figure is always

    descending, indicating backwards motion. The triplet figure also gives a feeling of give

    and take.

    Similarly, the vocal line descends at its entrance to express retrogression. To

    further emphasize the repetitive backwardness the poet writes about, Durey sets the

    words reculons on the same note, E, as the vocal dynamic continues its decrescendo to

    pp. This repetition of both the text and the same note, gives a feeling of stagnancy. Both

    the vocalist and the accompaniment must back away at the end of the piece, as the

    dynamic decreases to a hushed pp.

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    Durey emphasizes backwardness in Lcrevisse, and in doing so, expresses

    movement. Durey sets the phrase nous nous en allons (you and Iwe move) at measure

    11 in a triplet, indicating movement. In the following measures, the listener discovers that

    the movement is not forward, but backwardlike the crayfish.

    Dureys admiration for Debussy is apparent in this piece. The ascending chords in

    measures 9-12 are especially reminiscent of Debussys ethereal La cathdrale engloute

    (The Sunken Cathedral). In measure 8, the ascending nine-note pattern is based on a five-

    note, or pentatonic, scaleanother element indicative of Debussys work.

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    LcrevissePoulenc Much like Durey, Poulenc emphasizes the elements of backwardness in his setting

    of Lcrevisse. The approach and overall sound, however, is quite different. Dureys

    Lcrevisse does not crescendo at allit only gets quieter as the piece continues

    Poulencs setting provides more dynamic contrast. Also, unlike Dureys timide tempo

    marking setting, Poulencs setting trots along at an assez vif (rather fast) tempo. This is

    interesting, since crabs are not generally considered fast moving creatures.

    As the motive is introduced immediately in the accompaniment, one pictures a

    crab scurrying to and fro. The crab rushes forward and retreats backwards, rather

    quickly, along with the tide. The piece slows slightly and settles into a tempo at the vocal

    entrance at measure 3. The accompaniment in measures 3-8 mimics the vocal line, and

    the motive is reintroduced, an octave lower and backwards in measure nine, when the

    vocal line begins its slide backwards. The repetition, especially in measures 9-12,

    emphasizes the poets hesitant tendency. As the piece continues, the range of the

    accompaniment descends and both hands move into the bass clef at measure nine.

    Fig. 11 Lcrevisse, mm. 1-2

    The tessitura of the vocal line lies around A-flat, as the piece is in A-flat minor.

    The vocal line moves in seconds and thirds until reculons in bar nine, when the voice

    slides down a fifth, emphasizing backwardness. At measure six, Poulenc alters the time

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    signature to 2/4, for only a measure. This has an interesting effect on the text Vous et moi

    nous nous en allons; it makes that particular line seem to be a parenthetical phrase that

    ties in the metaphor relating the poet to the crab. Vivian Wood notes that Lcrevisse

    has irregular phrase groupings: a two-bar introduction is followed by a two-bar phrase, a

    phrase of one-and-a-half bars is wedged in the middle of the piece, followed by another

    two-bar phrase and two two-bar repetitions of reculons.73 The dynamics hover around

    mf for the most part, although Pierre Bernac suggests more of a contrast at the end of the

    piece, with the repeated reculons on piano rather than mezzo forte.74

    73 Vivian Wood, Francis Poulenc: An Analysis of Style, 117. 74 Bernac, Interpretation of French Song, 279.

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    La CarpeDurey This ethereal glimpse into the life of a carp is effectively portrayed as triste (sad)

    as the piece indicates. Dureys setting of La Carpe seems to mourn the long life of a

    carp. The first three measures set the mood, the accompaniment giving a feel of

    disconsolateness at a p dynamic. Already, the listener can envision the murky waters in

    which the carp dwells.

    As the sixteenth notes in minor thirds are introduced in measure four, along with

    the vocal line, the carp begins its movement. The G minor chord gives a feeling of

    unsettledness. The first line of poetry crescendos to an early climax at the singers outcry

    of the word Carpes in the fifth measure. The E-flat augmented chord in the

    accompaniment complements the exclamatory forte in the vocal line. The singer marvels

    at the carps long life and ponders its lonely existence as the rest of the line descends and

    begins to decrescendo. As the vocal line softens, the accompaniment begins a sweeping

    sixteenth note figure in measure six giving way to the ascending staccato sequence at a

    pianissimo dynamic in measures seven through ten.

    Fig. 12 La Carpe, mm. 5-6

    The piece adopts an especially tender tone as the singer poses the question Est-ce

    que la mort vous oublie? (Has death forgotten you?) in measures 11-12. The

    accompaniment, at this point, is less busy, and plays ascending seventh-chords, starting

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    with A-flat major, in measure 11. The series of ascending seventh chords continues

    through measure 13 to accompany the triplets in the vocal line.

    The piece seems to end in the fifteenth measure with the ethereal sprinkling of

    notes in the right hand, but the listener is surprised by the B-natural and G played in the

    bass clef in measure 16. This could, perhaps, indicate the carps long-awaited death.

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    La Carpe--Poulenc

    La Carpe is argued to be Poulencs most profound Bestiaire composition.

    Despite its simplicity, the 11-measure song conveys the poems sense of hopelessness

    effectively. Appropriately indicated trs triste, trs lent (very sad, very slow), Poulencs

    La Carpe is simple in structure. In fact, every other measure in the accompaniment is

    the same, which gives a feeling of the banal existence of the carp. The repetitiveness in

    the accompaniment makes the vocal line especially important. And, at a hushed

    pianissimo, the voice creates the drama of the piece.

    The vocal line is consistent, moving mostly in small intervals. The consistency

    provides for contrast when the vocal line has larger intervals. The vocal line starts out at a

    stifling whisper on E-flat to set the scene of the carp in its pool. The line creeps along

    varying only when the pitch dips down a major second to D-flat and back up to E-flat,

    which seems to be the home base for the voice. The consistency of the vocal line

    makes the minor sixth jump at the voices next entrance at measure five especially

    haunting; it adds drama to the line although it is still at a hushed pianissimo. Similarly,

    the octave jump in measure ten achieves a similar effect and evokes a tender quality of

    the voice to express the word mlancolie.

    Fig. 13 La Carpe, mm. 9-10

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    The piece is grounded in the quite depressing key of A-flat minor and has an

    uneven number of measureseleven, to be exact. The dynamics indicated do not come

    above pianissimo. Even though the piece is short, it gives the feeling of time passing very

    slowly. The thirty-second note sequence repeated on beats one and three of each

    measure, give a feeling of repetition. It is apparent that Poulenc paid careful attention to

    setting the text to music. The vocal line sounds in a natural rhythma rhythm that

    complements the flow of the text. Wilfrid Mellers said it well when he asserted that the

    piece scarcely breathes.75

    75Mellers, Francis Poulenc, 5.

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    VI. Conclusion

    One cannot conclude this study without comparing the individual composers

    differences in popularity, lifestyle and choices.

    While it is generally agreed that Poulencs setting is superior to Dureys, one

    cannot overlook Dureys contribution of setting all 26 of the animal poems to music.

    Graham Johnson comments that while the younger composers [Poulencs] inherent wit

    and tenderness are hard to beatDureys wider selection of animal poems (elephant, fly,

    flea, and dove, among many others), supplements Poulencs much smaller menagerie.76

    It is intriguing to consider the differences in popularity of each cycle. Perhaps

    Poulencs sampling of six settings was to his advantage in a quality over quantity-like

    manner. Maybe the number of settings did not impact the success and it was merely that

    more people preferred Poulencs setting. It is also possible that since Poulenc was on the

    rise as a popular, young Parisian composer, people simply paid more attention to his

    setting. Dureys settings of Le chvre, dromadaire, dauphin, sauterelle, crevisse, and

    carpe, however, stand their own ground when compared directly to Poulencs same six

    settings.

    It is important in comparing these two cycles to observe the similarities and

    differences since the composers both stemmed from the same Parisian artistic climate. It

    is apparent that both Durey and Poulenc appreciated and were inspired by Apollinaires

    poetry. While it is difficult to tell whether or not the two drew inspiration from Dufys

    woodcuts, it is apparent that they considered Apollinaires surface implications, as well

    as deeper meanings conveyed through the text. Poulenc seems to have struck a chord

    with Apollinaires deeper implications and Graham Johnson goes as far as to say that 76 Graham Johnson, A French Song Companion, 152.

  • 56

    even if he had just composed La Carpe, it would stand on its own as a significant

    musical contribution:

    If the composer had written only this latter page he would have been remembered; the rise and fall of the vocal line on Poissons de la mlancolie reveals a tenderness which is the wistful voice of Poulenc himselfas he signs off from his first masterpiece.77

    Francis Poulencs Le Bestiaire is published by several publishing companies

    and is included in several French song anthologies, while Dureys setting is more difficult

    to find in print. Poulencs setting has been recorded by numerous singers, while the only

    professional recording of the entire Durey Bestiary is recorded by French baritone

    Franois Le Roux and pianist Graham Johnson. The Le Roux-Johnson recording is all

    encompassing in that, in addition to the 26 animal songs, it includes Le Roux reading the

    Orpheus poems in context.

    Durey struggled for recognition, while Poulenc received it readily. Durey was

    never very populareven while associated with Les Six. In contrast, however, Les Six,

    for Poulenc, served as a springboard for his popularity. This contrast in popularity,

    however, did not impact Dureys admiration and affinity for Poulenc. For them, Le

    Bestiaire was a bonding experience, although neither of them planned for it to be.

    Dureys whimsical settings cannot be disregarded as significant output, even

    when compared directly to Poulencs settings. After all, Dureys Bestiaire was

    complete and included the entire procession of animals. In some cases, as in Le

    Dauphin, Durey aimed for simplicity in order to have the text speak for itself. Perhaps

    it was that certain poems did not call for music in the way some of the others did. For the

    most part, Durey and Poulenc characterized the animals differently. Dureys graceful

    77Johnson, A French Song Companion, 350.

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    dolphin is contrasted with Poulencs animated, lively sea creature; Poulencs dromedary

    trudges along, while Dureys has a hop in its step.

    The musical settings of Le Bestiaire serve to supplement the poem and woodcuts.

    With the three aspects combinedmusic, poem, and woodcutthe audience can

    effectively picture Apollinaires procession of animals. I believe the composers unique

    compositional qualities and musical influences provided for creative settings of the

    poetry that reflect their individual interpretations of Apollinaires text. With that being

    said, I believe Dureys six common settings are certainly on the same quality level as

    Poulencs and should also be regarded as a significant contribution to the French mlodie

    genre.

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    Bibliography

    Apollinaire, Guillaume, and Raoul Dufy. Bestiary, or, The Parade of Orpheus. Translated by Pepe Karmel. Boston: David R. Godine, 1980. Barber, Richard. Bestiary. Rochester, NY: Boydell and Brewer Inc., 1993. Bates, Scott. Guillaume Apollinaire. New York: Twayne Publishers, 1967. Bernac, Pierre, Winifred Radford, and Sir Lennox Berkeley. Francis Poulenc: The Man and His Songs. Great Britain: Kahn & Averill Publishers, 2002. Bernac, Pierre. The Interpretation of French Song. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1970.

    Bohn, Willard. "Contemplating Apollinaire's Bestiaire." Modern Language Review 99, no. 1 (2004): 45-51. Brody, Elaine. Paris: The Musical Kaleidoscope, 1870-1925. London: Robson Books, 1988. Cogniat, Raymond. Raoul Dufy. New York: Crown Publishers, 1962. Devoto, Mark. Paris, 1918-1945, in Modern Times: From World War I to the present, ed. Robert Morgan. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1994. Durey, Louis, Catalogue Comment, translated by Isabelle Battioni. Hansen, Peter S. Twentieth Century Music. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1971. Harding, James. The Ox on the Roof. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1972. Johnson, Graham and Richard Stokes. A French Song Companion. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000. Johnson, Graham. "Louis DureyNeglected Member of Les Six" essay in accompanying booklet, Songs by Louis Durey performed by Franois Le Roux and Graham Johnson. Hyperion CDA67257, 2000. Compact disc. Lassaigne, Jacques. Dufy: Biographical and Critical Studies. Geneva: Skira, 1954. Lehner, Ernst and Johanna. A Fantastic Bestiary: Beasts and Monsters in Myth and Folklore. New York: Tudor, 1969. Mellers, Wilfrid. Francis Poulenc. New York: Oxford University Press, 1993.

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    Morgan, Robert. Twentieth-Century Music: A History of Musical Style in Modern Europe and America. New York: W. W. Norton, 1991. Prez-Tibi, Dora. "Dufy, Raoul." In Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online, http://www.oxfordartonline.com/subscriber/article/grove/art/T023961 (accessed November 29, 2010). Poulenc, Francis, and Winifred Radford. Diary of My Songs. London: Victor Gollancz Ltd., 1986. Shattuck, Richard. Introduction to Selected Writings of Guillaume Apollinaire, by Guillaume Apollinaire. New York: New Directions Publishing, 1971. Stolba, K. Marie. The Development of Western Music: A History. Boston: McGraw-Hill, 1998. University of Calgary Libraries and Cultural Resources, Special Collections: Glossary, U. of Calgary, http://specialcollections.ucalgary.ca/home/glossary (accessed July 9, 2010). Wood, Marc. "Homme de tte." Musical Times 141, no. 1873 (Winter 2000). http://www.jstor.org/stable/1004733 (accessed October 9, 2009). Wood, Vivian. Poulencs Songs: An Analysis of Style. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1979.